Re: Baby names
Posted: Wed Jun 27, 2012 6:46 pm
krebscout, I think the popular spelling is actually "Matt." I could be wrong though, and I feel like this debate may have happened before. 
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Oh, no, it is. But for the purposes of the paraplegic jokes, it's Mat.Marduk wrote:krebscout, I think the popular spelling is actually "Matt." I could be wrong though, and I feel like this debate may have happened before.
This is where I feel gyped, because I went from a weird first name/normal last name combo, which had a sense of balance, to weird on both counts once I got married, and now my name isn't really recognizable as a name - it looks more like typing gibberish.yayfulness wrote: I'm a fan of reasonably normal names, although the most important thing to me is how well (or badly) the first and last name fit together.
I'm not 100% on this, but I'm pretty sure she came up with the name before she went on her Anne McCaffrey kick. And I do know that she later found out about the Norse meaning, but I again think she had it in mind before.Laser Jock wrote:I've actually read this name before; Anne McCaffrey used it for one of her important secondary characters in the Dragonriders of Pern books. A little searching turned up that it's also a village in Norway and means "slope" in Old Norse.bobtheenchantedone wrote:Closer to the original topic, my mother made up the name for one of my sisters - Brekke.
Is there any chance your mom either read Anne McCaffrey, or got it from Norse?
As a related point, all you plans to give your child a name that "everyone can spell" and "everyone can pronounce" are out the window if he or she moves to a country or region where they speak a different language. (Shoot, even the English speakers here in Maine have some trouble with my Scandinavian patronymic last name that's a dime-a-dozen in Utah and Idaho. But ask them to spell a French-Canadian surname like Robichaud or Paradis or Ouellette? No problem.)Digit wrote:The times that I have seen the National Spelling Bee on TV, it seemed to me that there was a high proportion of children of Indian (from India) heritage, and they all seemed to have extremely long names. I wondered if learning to write their own name prepared them for being able to remember long names more than little John Peters or Mary Jones.
My people (Mormons) are perhaps tied, or a close second. I have a very Mormon name, but it's in the same class as a kid being born in this millennium and being named Bella or Fredette - from pop culture, and definitely a very specific reference, but there's nothing "weird" or "offensive" or "made-up" about Bella, per se. Still, this may contribute to why I will name my kids very traditional, top-200 names like Madeleine and Patrick.Imogen wrote:http://theboard.byu.edu/questions/67950/
Can I just say, as a teacher, made up names are THE WORST!!! Mezmariah?! Really?!
And my people (the black ones) are the worst offenders of stupid baby names. I have a cousin named Sir Anthony Parker. SIR?!?!? WHAT'S WRONG WITH PEOPLE!! Or, Gynesis and Beautii (which I saw on TV).
In mass on Sunday, my priest had a RANT, which included baby names. He'll refuse to baptize your child if you give it a stupid name.
Now, my name is extremely unusual in the States, but not in Iran (where my dad is from). And I gravitate towards normal, but not over-used names. Things that are easy to spell, read, and say, but aren't top-100 names.
My obsession with 1930s literature and movies has introduced me to truly wonderful names: Nora, Brigid, Ginger. I like Marian too, which I got from the latest Emily "I Wish I Could Quit You!" Giffin novel.UffishThought wrote:I've been doing a lot of indexing in the past week or so, and I keep finding names on the 1940s census that are kind of outdated. The more I do it, though, the more I like the names. But many of them would probably be a bad idea. Like Eunice. (Take that, Genuine!)
It's also given me a new appreciation for my grandma's name, Maude. How darling! But again, maybe not the best for a little kid.